
- Collection of
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
- Series title
- STREET RAMBLER
- Title
- Artist Name
- NAKAHUJI Takehiko
- Year
- 2011-2016
- Material / Technique
- Ink-jet print
- Dimensions
- 499x331mm
- Accession number
- 10117646
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum “Search the Collection”
- https://collection.topmuseum.jp/Publish/detailPage/35451/
Other items of Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (40724)

NIGHTLESS ver.2
TAMURA Yuichiro
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Dunes, Oceano
WESTON, Edward
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

The Empire of the Ornaments The Empire of the Ornaments
KAWADA Kikuji
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Portraits of Artists KOISO Ryohei
AKIYAMA Shotaro
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

PHENAKISTISCOPES Disc for Heliocinegraph
Photographer unknown
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Gardner's Photographic Sketch Book of the War vol.1 Incidents of the War, Slaughter Pen, Foot of Round Top, Gettysburg
O'SULLIVAN, Timothy H.
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Hôtel Dodun, 21 Richelieu Street
ATGET, Eugène
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Student Struggle against the Security Treaty Students wearing futons running away from the gas bullets being fired. On the roof of the Faculty of Law.
HAMAGUCHI Takashi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

ATOMS FOR PEACE "General Atomic" Fair posters, angular stream of light on right
SMITH, W. Eugene
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Park City Looking Northeast from Masonic Hill. In foreground, from left: Prospector Village; Prospector Park, Subdivision Phases I and III. In middle distance, across State Highway 248, Park Meadows, Subdivision 5.
BALTZ, Lewis
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

CAMERA NOTES GAINSBOROUGH GIRL
JOHNSTON, Frances Benjamin
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Family Change from photograph No.2
FUKASE Masahisa
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

A family of Japanese immigrants living in a Japanese settlement in the town of Jarabacoa in the mountains of the Dominican Republic. Emigration from Japan to the Dominican republic began in the 1950s during the regime of Rafael Trujillo, but the Japanese government's recruitment promises of grants of up to 18 hectares of good farmland and other incentives were not honored. There was also friction between the Japanese immigrants and the local people. In 2006, the Japanese government formally apologized to the Japanese immigrants
OKAMURA Akihiko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Tokyo
HAMAYA Hiroshi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

THEATER SOUTH PACIFIC
SMITH, W. Eugene
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Light, Shadow
KUMAZAWA Maroni
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum